Macron faces crushing defeat in EU elections

His party is way behind Marine Le Pen's leading National Rally

French President Emmanuel Macron and his wife Brigitte Macron attend an event in the ballroom of Münster Town Hall, in Muenster, Germany, Tuesday May 28, 2024, where Macron was awarded the International Peace of Westphalia Prize. (Jana Rodenbusch/Pool Photo via AP)
By Dénes Albert
2 Min Read

President Emmanuel Macron’s party will suffer a historic defeat in the European Union elections on Sunday, Hungarian news portal Origo writes. It is not hard to guess that after this huge defeat, he will take even more refuge in foreign policy. Having failed in his own country, he is trying to achieve unquantifiable and non-existent successes in the international world.

According to Wednesday’s opinion poll by IFOP-Fiducial, Macron’s party has been unable to improve four days before the European Parliament elections, standing unchanged at 15 percent. At the same time, Marine Le Pen’s party is polling at 33 percent. No governing party in France has lost by such a humiliating margin since 1979, the first European Parliament elections on party lists. True, it is also rare for a governing party to win what can be considered a roughly midterm election; the last time this happened was in 2009 when then President Nicolas Sarkozy won the EU parliament election.

Six French parties are now in the running for the European Parliament. After Marine Le Pen (RN) and Macron (a coalition of four parties), the Socialist Party will be third, with 13.5 percent, but they could easily overtake Macron in the end. The communist, anti-Semitic, pro-Muslim Jean-Luc Mélenchon’s party could get 8 percent, the classic Gaullist, center-right party 7.5 percent and Éric Zemmour’s anti-immigration party, formed just two years ago and unrivaled among young people, 6 percent.

IFOP’s seat estimates suggest that the far-left Green Party, still at 5 percent but in steady decline, will be eliminated.

Voter turnout is now expected to slightly exceed 50 percent.

Macron is currently midway through his second five-year term as president, and according to the French constitution, he cannot run for a third after his current term expires in 2027.

SOURCES:Origo
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